Shocks and finite-time singularities in Hele-Shaw flow
Abstract
Hele-Shaw flow at vanishing surface tension is ill-defined. In finite time, the flow develops cusp-like singularities. We show that the ill-defined problem admits a weak {\it dispersive} solution when singularities give rise to a graph of shock waves propagating in the viscous fluid. The graph of shocks grows and branches. Velocity and pressure jump across the shock. We formulate a few simple physical principles which single out the dispersive solution and interpret shocks as lines of decompressed fluid. We also formulate the dispersive weak solution in algebro-geometrical terms as an evolution of the Krichever-Boutroux complex curve. We study in detail the most generic (2,3) cusp singularity, which gives rise to an elementary branching event. This solution is self-similar and expressed in terms of elliptic functions.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0811.0635,
title = {Shocks and finite-time singularities in Hele-Shaw flow},
author = {Seung-Yeop Lee and Razvan Teodorescu and Paul Wiegmann},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0811.0635},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
24 pages, 11 figures; references added; figures changed